Art

July 19, 2026

AI Artist Turns His Generated Compositions Into Tactile Embroidered Works [Interview]

Contemporary artist Richard Nadler lives and works in Munich, Germany, creating richly layered images that blur the boundaries among AI-generated art, textile craftsmanship, and traditional artistic practice. From vibrant domestic interiors to psychedelic forests and chrome-clad samurai, Nadler creates worlds that feel simultaneously digital and tangible. Nadler left behind his career in London’s banking sector to pursue his craft, following in the footsteps of his grandfather and mother, who were both painters.

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July 16, 2026

Suspended Rings Float Through an Industrial Hall in Kinetic Light Installation

Spanish artist SpY has unveiled a mesmerizing new installation for the 2026 NUR International Media Art Festival in Kazan, Russia. Titled CYCLES N2, the large-scale work suspends 15 illuminated rings above a dramatic hall lined with glowing red ramps. The rings rise and fall in synchronized motion while a custom soundtrack fills the space, transforming the industrial setting into an immersive environment that constantly shifts before visitors’ eyes.

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July 15, 2026

Light Installation Makes Historic Paris Chapel Appear To Breathe During Nuit Blanche

Italian light artist Emilio Ferro transformed Paris’ historic Chapelle Expiatoire into a glowing, breathing monument with Threshold, a site-specific installation unveiled during Nuit Blanche on June 6, 2026. Commissioned by the City of Paris and produced by Studio Artera, the work sent a single beam of white light through the chapel in sync with the opening and closing of its doors, creating the illusion that the two-century-old building itself was breathing.

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July 13, 2026

New Exhibition Explores Palestinian Stories of Displacement Across Generations

Though there has been little said about it over the years, Palestinian displacement started decades ago. During the 1948 Nakba, around 750,000 Palestinians were forcibly displaced from their homes as Zionist groups seized towns and villages, forcing families to rebuild their lives elsewhere. Some eventually settled in Canada, and today their stories are being shared at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights (CMHR).

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